Week #3 in the NFL saw the most mishaps to date which is why the further along the season goes, the more it seems inevitable that sports historians will find it necessary to put an *asterisk on this season’s games. Every game, no matter who is reffing, will have its share of questionable calls but it seems more and more this year that some of them have been ‘game changing’. Which leads us to our first reason why the replacement refs need to be replaced:

1. Game changing calls can, in some instances, put a team into the playoffs that shouldn’t be there and put others that should on the charter flight back home.

2. The Monday Night Football game between the Packers and the Seahawks. Two refs in the end zone and each with a different take on the game-ending play. The call that stood was, of course, incorrect, making Russell Wilson the first QB in NFL history to win a game by throwing an interception!

The picture of ineptitude has one replacement ref signalling for a Touchdown while the other is calling for a Touchback. Roger Goodell, unforunately, is the only one who can change this situation. Photo: AP

3. On the Redskins final drive vs the Bengals in their week #3 loss 38-31 , an unsportsmanlike conduct call by the refs resulted in a 20 yard penalty instead of 15. What’s worse is that the refs never explained who the call was against nor what the penalty was for.

4. Two ‘extra’ time outs were awarded; one to the Ravens in their game vs the Eagles in week #1 and the other to the Seahawks in the game vs the Cardinals also in the same week.

5. Oakland WR Darrius Heyward-Bey was sent to the hospital with a neck injury after Steeler safety Ryan Mundy’s helmet-to-helmet hit in the Raiders week 3 loss. No flag was thrown on the play!

6. An ESPN warning to the NFL eliminated Brian Stropolo from reffing the week #2 Saints-Panthers game when it was discovered that the ref was an ardent Saints fan on his Facebook page.

7. Completely out of timeouts, a replacement ref awards two replay challenges to the 49ers in the last several minutes of their loss to the Vikings in week #3.

8. Tennessee got an extra 12 yards marked off on a penalty by a replacement ref in overtime in the week #3 game vs the Lions. The ball was placed on the Detroit 29 yard line instead of the Detroit 41, thus slowing the drive towards the Titan’s winning field goal.

9. All five challenges in the Week #3 Chiefs-Saints game were overturned ‘upon further review’.

10.Excessive penalties/Flow of the game- With some replacement crews calling as many as 20-25 penalties a game, and then deliberating with each other for several minutes on most of them, it has affected the flow of the action and impeded teams in hurry-up offenses by completely eliminating the element of surprise.

Scenes like this where longer than normal discussions following penalties have become commonplace are disruptive to the flow of NFL games. Photo: zimbio.com

The product that the NFL puts on the field every week is beginning to lose some of its credibility. The rumblings from the fans and the media after each game are getting louder and more frequent. It is time for Roger Goodell to step up to the plate and do the right thing before the replacement refs make a mockery of the most popular sport in this country.

Goodell needs to come off of his white horse and fix the mess he has created; and quickly! The fans as well as the players shouldn’t have to suffer because of the commissioner’s ineptitude…

9 comments on “10 Reasons why the Replacement Refs should be replaced…”

The question is, what do we as fans do? Do we protest, not go to games, threaten Comcast and TimeWarner to not pay our cable bills? Do players stand in solidarity with the locked-out officials and not play another game until the contract with the NFL is settled? This is what we as fans need to discuss now.

We saw all ten reasons clearly last night ! As for the farcical statement from the NFL supporting the officials . It tells us , the fans , all we need to know about Roger Goodell and what an odious S-O-B he has , always been !

If at all interested let me know what you think ? Click unto the link shown to view .

What the fans can choose to do , is not to attend the games and simply boycott the NFL until the league hierarchy comes to their damn senses . But then again what gave us the impression that the NFL had any common sense to begin with ?

The fans are not only attending games, they’re watching in numbers like never before! MNF was one of the most watched games in years and the 90 minute ESPN post game show (5.1 million viewers) was the most watched in their history. That’s what Goodell is banking on-the sport is just too popular for him to have to acquiesce on the ref issue.

That’s with the exception of the Buccaneers . Goodell can bank on that but he is going have to answer questions directly concerning last night’s mess . He will remain a pompous a#s , and he thinks because the NFL can bank an additional $2.5 billion because of a tv contract extension serves the fans well , when this garbage is being offered up. Then he’s an even bigger fool than I first thought !

I was just commenting as to that on another blog. Last year the Giants didn’t clinch until the final game and then they went on their run. No one saw that coming. Now, despite the Packers offensive struggles, they’re not that far removed from knowing a thing or two about January. If they miss the playoffs by a game- THIS game? Hmmm.

I was just commenting as to that on another blog. Last year the Giants didn’t clinch until the final game and then they went on their run. No one saw that coming. Now, despite the Packers offensive struggles, they’re not that far removed from knowing a thing or two about January. If they miss the playoffs by a game- THIS game? Hmmm.

Search Bar

Search for:

Disclaimer

All images and other content on fantasyfurnace.com are property of their respective owners. This site is strictly for informational and entertainment purposes, and is in no way affiliated with the NFL, MLB, or NBA and thus claims no rights to the trademarks.

All opinions expressed in the articles and/or comments are the opinion of the writer(s) and not necessarily the opinion of fantasyfurnace.com.